Chris Kyme’s Postcard from Hong Kong: Bounce back Hong Kong

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Chris Kyme’s Postcard from Hong Kong: Bounce back Hong Kong

Chris Kyme (pictured above) continues his ‘Postcard from Hong Kong’ series. Years ago when Hong Kong was going through a rough patch (economic downturn, SARS, bird flu etc) there was a campaign which ran under the umbrella theme ‘Bounce back Hong Kong’.

 

It was founded on the belief that, whatever the bad times and the challenges that come along, Hong Kong always got up, dusted itself down and got back in the ring.

Chris Kyme’s Postcard from Hong Kong: Bounce back Hong Kong

Which was very true. The city and its people has always been like that. It’s called survival. Around the same time, a brilliant TV ad for Giordano was done which highlighted all the ills that were besieging the city with the tagline ‘Tough city, tough jeans’. Glorious work.

VIEW THE FILM

Well right now this needs to be a tough city, that’s for sure. For one reason and another we’re been having an ‘annus horribilis’ so far thanks to Omicron and other challenges we’ve had in recent years.

The handling of the recent surge in cases has been criticised from all quarters of the business sector, with very good reason. Businesses have been dying, lives have been ruined, people have been queuing up to leave.

Naturally through all of this the city’s beleaguered image from the outside has taken a battering, with many willing and able to put the boot in and declare Hong Kong dead.

I don’t believe it is. I’ve lived and worked here so long I know the spirit and resilience of Hong Kong people and I have faith in their ability to get back up eventually if we can just get through this tough time and get some sort of sense of direction for the future.

However, then I saw this ad, running in international media.

Chris Kyme’s Postcard from Hong Kong: Bounce back Hong Kong

Honestly speaking, you have to wonder if some people have ever heard of the idea of having a strategy.

Right now, to the outside world, Hong Kong does not appear to be a city ‘full of opportunities’. It’s as if everything that’s been going on has all been a bad dream and the sun is shining on the horizon and all will be wonderful.

It brings to mind a campaign done in the 1980s for British Rail which at that time had an appalling reputation for service, and Saatchi & Saatchi was engaged to try and help implement some sort of crisis management, reputation wise.

A strategy was devised which sought to, instead of ignore the problems, tackle them head on, and focus on what BR was doing to try to improve things.

The campaign slogan was “We’re getting there”. What it meant was, yeah we know things have been screwed, but we’re doing our bit, bit by bit. to try and rectify things. Which you couldn’t really argue with.

VIEW THE BRITISH RAIL FILM

Chris Kyme’s Postcard from Hong Kong: Bounce back Hong Kong

I feel this is the kind of approach Hong Kong needs right now if it is to try and rebuild its reputation.

It is going to take a lot of hard work. It’ll mean changing the way we tackle the problems and set a new course for the future.

And, from a marketing perspective , if we want to help the image of the city, it will need a well considered strategy that amounts to more than running ads in international media that act as if nothing has been happening and everything is great.

I do believe that Hong Kong will once again be a land of opportunities. It has too much going for it to remain a post-Covid ghost town. As much as some with less than altruistic agendas would like to see it that way. The people who drive this city are tough. They know how to survive. They know how to make money.

We need to focus on the positives and fix the negatives. But to do that, we need to start by addressing the negatives.

If ever this city has seen a need to tap into its collective creativity, it’s got to be now. Bounce back Hong Kong ad industry.

Hong Kong will bounce back, simply because, after everything has been said and done, it’s still Hong Kong. And it’s unique.